ROSE – A1080562
Safe - 7-14-2016 Brooklyn Rescue: Feline Rescue of SI Please honor your pledges: http://felinerescueofstatenisland.org/donation/
***SAFE 07/14/16*** SWEET ROSE WAS BROUGHT INTO THE ACC AS AN INJURED STRAY AND NOW THE ACC WILL CUT OFF HER CHANCES OF RECOVERING AND FINDING A HOME!! ROSE has injuries to her face which are painful to her and her left hind area. The ACC staff was not sure what caused it as usual but cleaned the wound and gave her some antibiotics – and then listed her tonight!! ROSE was purring on her assessment which shows she is most likely a lost pet who got out and fell into a bad situation. ROSE is AVERAGE rated and only needs a place to recuperate so she can feel herself again. Her grumbling at the shelter is most likely due to her injuries which should be assessed by a competent vet. PLEASE HELP ROSE TONIGHT – EMAIL [email protected] FOR RESCUE INFO AND GIVE THIS SWEETIE A CHANCE FOR A HAPPY ENDING TO HER STORY!!
Brooklyn Center
My name is ROSE. My Animal ID # is A1080562.
I am a female brn tabby domestic sh mix. The shelter thinks I am about 2 YEARS
I came in the shelter as a STRAY on 07/09/2016 from NY 11369, owner surrender reason stated was STRAY.
MOST RECENT MEDICAL INFORMATION AND WEIGHT
07/12/2016 Exam Type RE-EXAM – Medical Rating is 4 NC – SEVERE CONDITIONS NOT CONTAGIOUS, Behavior Rating is NONE, Weight 8.2 LBS.
7/12/16 S-left flank wound and left lip wound debrided 3 days prior, on buprenex and clavamox, eating well O-BAR, pink mm, hydrated EENT-CAU, COU, no nasal d/c H/L-purring throughout exam GI-wound at upper left lip that appears to be healing, negative oral otherwise, SNP, NMP GU-F, no mgts, no vaginal d/c MSI-BCS 3/5, amb x 4, large healing wound in left flank, otherwise good haircoat Neuro-a and a A-2 yo FI DSH 1. oral (left upper lip) and flank wound R/O chemical burn vs immune mediated vs other P-continue with buprenex and clavamox vet check in 2 days to monitor healing and if additional meds are necessary 07/09/16 17:28 Brought in as injured stray MC scan negative BARH. BCS 6/9. Allows some handling but is painful at face and left hind area. Large, swollen ulcerative plaque at left upper lip. No lingual ulcers or ulcers within oral cavity. Adult dentition – mild staining throughout Ears clean. Eyes clear OU. Mild scabbing at caudal dorsum At left flank/hip/inguinal region is large superficial, ulcerated plaque. Approx 4″x3″. Edges are well granulated, mild amount of necrotic white tissue covering wound. Appears painful. F, No spay scar seen. MG undeveloped. Abd snp/nmp H/L auscult normally A: Young adult F DSH Ulceration at lip Wound at left hip – r/o allergic plaque/reaction vs trauma vs other Suspect eosinophilic granuloma complex/Allergies P: Sedated with 0.1 ml Telazol for wound assessment/treatment Wound cleaned with dilute chlorhex Lightly debrided wound with #10 blade Rinsed with sterile saline Rx Amoxi/Clav (45.7 mg/ml) 1.1 ml PO BID x 14 d STRONGLY recommend tapered steroid course – no safe options for cats within shelter Buprenex (0.5 mg/ml) 0.24 ml sublingual TID x 3 days Suspect condition would respond well to steroid therapy – recommend placement ASAP for appropriate treatment. Prognosis good with appropriate treatment. Potential for relapse of condition, but can be managed. Recheck wound/lesion and response to antibiotics/pain meds in 3 days FeLV/FIV neg/neg Applied activyl (0.5 ml topical) RV and FVRCP given
07/09/2016 PET PROFILE MEMO
07/09/16 14:41 Cat Rose is a gray tabby DSH, she was found as a stray & brought to ACC. Rose appeared to have an injury on its left side oh her body & on her mouth. Rose allowed all handling & scanned negative. When another cat entere the cat cage next to Rose, she began to hiss at the other cat.
WEB MEMO
No Web Memo
07/12/2016 BEHAVIOR EVALUATION – AVERAGE
Exam Type BEHAVIOR
Rose was brought in as a stray, so we cannot speak to her behavior in her previous home. Reaction to assessor: Rose was rubbing up against the kennel door, purring and rolling around playfully. Reaction when softly spoken to: Rose purrs softly and continues to solicit attention. Reaction to cage door opening: Rose was calm and relaxed. Reaction to touch: Rose is incredibly affectionate and allows petting all over. She leans in for rubs and purrs softly when pet along her body. Reaction to being picked up: Rose was a bit tense and grumbles but allows all handling. Behavior Determination: Average Rose interacts with the observer, appreciates attention, is easy to handle and tolerates all petting. This cat is showing behavior appropriate for new or experienced cat parents. This cat is showing behavior appropriate for new or experienced cat parents.
GROUP BEHAVIOR EVALUATION
No Group Behavior Summary
07/09/2016 INITIAL PHYSICAL EXAM
Medical rating was 4 NC – SEVERE CONDITIONS NOT CONTAGIOUS, behavior rating was NONE
07/09/16 17:28 Brought in as injured stray MC scan negative BARH. BCS 6/9. Allows some handling but is painful at face and left hind area. Large, swollen ulcerative plaque at left upper lip. No lingual ulcers or ulcers within oral cavity. Adult dentition – mild staining throughout Ears clean. Eyes clear OU. Mild scabbing at caudal dorsum At left flank/hip/inguinal region is large superficial, ulcerated plaque. Approx 4″x3″. Edges are well granulated, mild amount of necrotic white tissue covering wound. Appears painful. F, No spay scar seen. MG undeveloped. Abd snp/nmp H/L auscult normally A: Young adult F DSH Ulceration at lip Wound at left hip – r/o allergic plaque/reaction vs trauma vs other Suspect eosinophilic granuloma complex/Allergies P: Sedated with 0.1 ml Telazol for wound assessment/treatment Wound cleaned with dilute chlorhex Lightly debrided wound with #10 blade Rinsed with sterile saline Rx Amoxi/Clav (45.7 mg/ml) 1.1 ml PO BID x 14 d STRONGLY recommend tapered steroid course – no safe options for cats within shelter Buprenex (0.5 mg/ml) 0.24 ml sublingual TID x 3 days Suspect condition would respond well to steroid therapy – recommend placement ASAP for appropriate treatment. Prognosis good with appropriate treatment. Potential for relapse of condition, but can be managed. Recheck wound/lesion and response to antibiotics/pain meds in 3 days FeLV/FIV neg/neg Applied activyl (0.5 ml topical) RV and FVRCP given
07/12/2016 RE-EXAM (LAST MAJOR EXAM)
Medical rating 4 NC – SEVERE CONDITIONS NOT CONTAGIOUS,
7/12/16 S-left flank wound and left lip wound debrided 3 days prior, on buprenex and clavamox, eating well O-BAR, pink mm, hydrated EENT-CAU, COU, no nasal d/c H/L-purring throughout exam GI-wound at upper left lip that appears to be healing, negative oral otherwise, SNP, NMP GU-F, no mgts, no vaginal d/c MSI-BCS 3/5, amb x 4, large healing wound in left flank, otherwise good haircoat Neuro-a and a A-2 yo FI DSH 1. oral (left upper lip) and flank wound R/O chemical burn vs immune mediated vs other P-continue with buprenex and clavamox vet check in 2 days to monitor healing and if additional meds are necessary 07/09/16 17:28 Brought in as injured stray MC scan negative BARH. BCS 6/9. Allows some handling but is painful at face and left hind area. Large, swollen ulcerative plaque at left upper lip. No lingual ulcers or ulcers within oral cavity. Adult dentition – mild staining throughout Ears clean. Eyes clear OU. Mild scabbing at caudal dorsum At left flank/hip/inguinal region is large superficial, ulcerated plaque. Approx 4″x3″. Edges are well granulated, mild amount of necrotic white tissue covering wound. Appears painful. F, No spay scar seen. MG undeveloped. Abd snp/nmp H/L auscult normally A: Young adult F DSH Ulceration at lip Wound at left hip – r/o allergic plaque/reaction vs trauma vs other Suspect eosinophilic granuloma complex/Allergies P: Sedated with 0.1 ml Telazol for wound assessment/treatment Wound cleaned with dilute chlorhex Lightly debrided wound with #10 blade Rinsed with sterile saline Rx Amoxi/Clav (45.7 mg/ml) 1.1 ml PO BID x 14 d STRONGLY recommend tapered steroid course – no safe options for cats within shelter Buprenex (0.5 mg/ml) 0.24 ml sublingual TID x 3 days Suspect condition would respond well to steroid therapy – recommend placement ASAP for appropriate treatment. Prognosis good with appropriate treatment. Potential for relapse of condition, but can be managed. Recheck wound/lesion and response to antibiotics/pain meds in 3 days FeLV/FIV neg/neg Applied activyl (0.5 ml topical) RV and FVRCP given
ALL LOCATIONS:
For more information on adopting from the NYC AC&C, or to find a rescue to assist, please read the following: http://
If you are local to the Tri-State, New England, and the general Northeast United States area, and you are SERIOUS about adopting or fostering one of the animals at NYC ACC, please read our MUST READ section for instructions, or email [email protected]
Our experienced volunteers will do their best to guide you through the process.
*We highly discourage everyone from trusting strangers that send them Facebook messages, offering help, for it has ended in truly tragic events.*
For more info on behavior codes and ratings, please read here:http://
For answers to Frequently Asked Questions, please see:http://
You can call (212) 788-4000 for automated instructions.
For more information on adopting from the NYC AC&C, or to find a rescue to assist, please read the following: http://urgentpodr.org/adoption-info-and-list-of-rescues. If you are local to the Tri-State, New England, and the general Northeast United States area, and you are SERIOUS about adopting or fostering one of the animals at NYC ACC, please read our MUST READ section for instructions, or email [email protected]. Our experienced volunteers will do their best to guide you through the process. * We highly discourage everyone from trusting strangers that send them Facebook messages, offering help, for it has ended in truly tragic events.* For more info on behavior codes and ratings, please click here: http://information.urgentpodr.org/acc-placement-status-descriptions. For answers to Frequently Asked Questions, please see: http://information.urgentpodr.org/category/frequently-asked-questions/. You can call (212) 788-4000 for automated instructions.
View all entries in: Safe Cats 2016-07